Getting the Media to Cover Your Bowling Tournament

If you are organizing a major bowling tournament, it would be a good idea to get the media to cover it. This would, at the very least, serve to raise the profile of the tournament. It would also help you in getting more people to know about your bowling alley (the one where the tournament would be held). And if you can get some good media coverage before the actual tournament, it would serve to draw more people to the event.

You see, people tend to take events that are covered by mainstream media very seriously. For instance, you may have someone who works at the local CVS Health office, and who doesn’t usually care about bowling tournaments. But if he learns, from a national TV channel, that there is an upcoming major tournament in the local bowling alley, he may be inclined to take interest in it: even if, in normal circumstances, he wouldn’t give a bowling tournament a second thought. You may actually find her going to the myhr cvs login page, signing in to his account there, and checking through her schedule to see if she would be off duty on the day of the tournament – so as to attend it.

So it is clear that getting the media to cover your bowling tournament can give you many benefits. The question that arises is as to how exactly you can get the media to do so.

The best thing to do, if you want the media to cover your bowling tournament, is simply to invite local journalists to the event. This can be just a matter of calling the local journalists, telling them about the upcoming bowling tournament, and inviting them to cover it. Or you can send a ‘press release’ to the local media stations, informing them about the upcoming bowling tournament, and inviting them to cover it. There are other cases where you may need to contact local media ‘fixers’, pay them, and request them to organize coverage for your bowling tournament.

Of course, having gotten media coverage for the bowling tournament, you better be sure that it lives up to the expectations. It would be unfair to get national media coverage, only to deliver a totally underwhelming event.